The verdict after day two

Seemingly unfazed by being hit for three fours in four balls by Smith, Moeen tempted the batsman with a flighted ball down the leg side and drew a leading edge, which was expertly caught by England captain Alastair Cook at short mid-on.

Then, just when Clarke was finding his range, Moeen held on to a sharp return catch at waist height to send the Australia captain on his way.

Rogers the nearly man

Chris Rogers has scored 50 in seven successive Test innings but not made 100 in any of them

Rogers, who will be 38 in August, continued his excellent Ashes record with a near-faultless 95.

Punching his trademark drives through the off-side and busily nurdling around the wicket, the left-hander shared half-century partnerships with David Warner, Smith and Clarke.

However he was out five runs short of a fourth Ashes hundred when he cut at a wideish away-swinger from Wood and was caught behind.

Rogers shook his head in disbelief and kicked the ground as he became the first player to score fifties in seven consecutive Test innings without converting any into hundreds.

Disciplined England, reckless Aussies

David Warner had scored seven centuries in 12 Tests prior to Cardiff

On a pitch continuing to offer little pace or movement off the surface, England’s bowlers were rewarded for their patience and discipline.

Sticking to a good or full length on or outside off stump, they invited Australia to go after them and were rewarded with a succession of reckless shots.

Warner was out driving James Anderson on the up and Rogers to a needless cut before Voges miscued a drive straight to extra cover when the close of play was in sight.

Mixed day for Mitchells

Mitchell Johnson’s figures were the worst by an Australian in England since Geoff Lawson in 1985

Once again, Mitchell Johnson bore the brunt of England’s assault on a riotous second morning as he recorded figures of 0-111 – the worst of his Test career.

Mercilessly mocked by the home crowd, Johnson’s mood worsened when he was finally awarded a first wicket, only to have it overturned.

Broad was given out caught at short leg off a Johnson short ball, but was sent back to the crease by the third umpire when replays showed Voges’s catch had touched the ground.

While Johnson could not buy a wicket, Mitchell Starc continued to pick them up on the cheap.

Despite conceding more runs than his bowling partner, Starc picked up the last two wickets to complete the third five-wicket haul of his Test career.

The state of play

Ben Stokes’s dismissal of Adam Voges gave England the edge

The sight of Nathan Lyon walking sheepishly to the crease for nightwatchman duties after Voges’s late dismissal underlined the perception that England have Australia right where they want them.

A first-innings lead of 80 or more would cement their advantage and leave them well placed to set up a push for victory over the weekend.

And although the pitch is offering little pace, its increasingly unpredictable bounce will make batting last on it decidedly difficult for Australia.

Stats of the day

England passed 400 runs in an Ashes innings for the first time since January 2011 in Sydney, when they made 644.

England have only ever lost six Tests having scored more than 400 in the first innings. However five of those were against Australia, the most recent in Adelaide in 2006-07.

Australia opener Chris Rogers has passed 50 in his past seven Test innings, equalling the world record held by four others (Everton Weekes, Andy Flower, Shivnarine Chanderpaul and Kumar Sangakkara). He has failed to make 100 in each of those innings.

Player reaction – ‘England ahead’

England’s Moeen Ali told BBC Test Match Special: “In the first innings of an Ashes, it’s important that we got 430 – and the way we put the Australia bowlers under pressure.

“We’re slightly ahead. A couple of early wickets tomorrow would put them under pressure. I would rather be in our position than Australia’s.”

Ex-England batsman Geoffrey Boycott on Test Match Special

“Yesterday many of us thought England edged it. Today it was definitely their day. They got most things right and Australia got hardly anything right – they didn’t bat with a lot of common sense. There is a lot of time left for England to win it. I’ll be surprised if Australia get up to England’s total.”

Australia’s Chris Rogers told BBC Test Match Special: “I started to get some rhythm with my feet and weight. Once you hit some out the middle the confidence comes through. I’m just disappointed I didn’t make it count.

“The pitch is a bit two-paced now. You saw with the Adam Voges dismissal that kicked a little. It is going to get harder and harder, but if you set your stall out and you are happy to bat a long time there is still the opportunity.

“It has been an excellent day of Test cricket. England maybe have the slight upper hand but hopefully we can get a few more runs.”

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